Will Mark has always lived a nomadic life. A confident guy who’s California cool, Mark isn’t a loner. He’s content going with the ebbs and flows of life.
The goalie, now at Syracuse after transferring from Long Island University, has changed places before. While growing up in Danville, Calif., Mark spent three years as an international student in Heidelberg, Germany — a move necessitated by his father’s job at a German software company.
The Marks moved back to California in fifth grade. Will Mark then spent his high school years at Proctor Academy, a boarding school in Andover, N.H. All this before heading 2,929 miles east to play collegiately at LIU.
Well-traveled? Sure. But Mark’s learned that the crease stays the same wherever he goes. Eighteen feet around. Nine feet from the center of goal line extended at every point. A perfect circle.
“I played my first year as a fifth grader in California on my local club team and got placed on the second-to-worst team, the C2 team,” Mark said. “We had two goalies, and they didn’t show up. My first game, I got a shutout. The rest is history.”
History is what Mark made at LIU. He set a program record with 30 saves in a three-goal loss against Bryant on April 27, 2021. The Bulldogs took 78 shots, but he somehow stayed locked in. That was the third time in 2021 he reset his own single-game program record.
Mark came to LIU after his initial recruitment to Vermont fell through. It was a mutual decision after Mark learned that his grades wouldn’t guarantee him admission into the school.
At the same time, a few hours south, Eric Wolf was in desperate need of a goalie with LIU’s impending elevation to Division I. He told his entire staff to drop everything and only recruit goalies until they found the answer. It was Brendan Schroeder, one of Wolf’s assistants, who discovered Mark.
“We went all in, full-court press on Will,” Wolf said. “We got him on campus and put an offer in his hand. He became the centerpiece of everything we did.”
Wolf, now the head coach at NJIT, expected his team to take some lumps in its jump up from Division II. Mark helped alleviate many of them. The Sharks were 1-6 in 2020 but improved dramatically to 6-5 in 2021. They were 7-8 in 2022.
In his 33 games, Mark made 499 saves (55.8 percent) and allowed 12.18 goals per game. He faced 1,435 shots, an average of 43.5 per contest. The 48 shots per game he faced in 2020 were the seventh-most a goalie faced on a per-game basis since 2015, according to Zack Capozzi of Lacrosse Reference.
“If we didn’t have Will in the net, the lumps might have been a little bigger,” Wolf said. “Every game, you could look back and know you were getting 15-20 saves.”
A 44-hour drive away from home, Mark acclimated just fine to Long Island. He jokes, with a nonchalant West Coast laugh, that he eats a bacon, egg and cheese every morning now for breakfast. The crease, same dimensions as back in California, eased the transition.
“Long Island is not a different coast. It’s a different country,” Wolf said. “Will’s demeanor, it just worked. We’re all a little bit crazy as Long Island guys. He came in super laid back.”